Florida police have said they are searching for a possible serial killer believed to have fatally shot three people over the last two weeks.Officials believe the murders, which happened blocks apart, were committed by the same gunman who may have chosen the victims at random, police say.The latest victim was an autistic man who was shot while walking home from work after getting on the wrong bus.Local residents have been advised not to walk alone after dark.

Florida police have said they are searching for a possible serial killer believed to have fatally shot three people over the last two weeks.Officials believe the murders, which happened blocks apart, were committed by the same gunman who may have chosen the victims at random, police say.The latest victim was an autistic man who was shot while walking home from work after getting on the wrong bus.Local residents have been advised not to walk alone after dark.

A personal unsolved mystery: my girlfriend called me in a panic because tonight the person living in her old apartment called their landlord saying that three cop cars showed up and loudly knocked on the door until someone answered. They repeatedly asked for my girlfriend and, upon finding out she was no longer living in the building, they left. We called the police and they investigated. They said no calls were made to the address in question from any precinct and there is no reason for authorities needing to contact. We're left pretty stumped and a little freaked out.

Trying to figure it out but the tenant went out of their way to contact the landlord so if they're trying to avoid attention for police showing up, they're doing a bad job. Also, it's a relatively up-rent place so I don't see that happening

Edit: my girlfriend was put in touch with the tenant and he told her basically the same details and also mentioned it was quite a spectacle on the street that other people on the block would corroborate.

LINCOLN, Neb. (WOWT) -- Two 'persons of interest' in the case of a missing 24-year-old Lincoln woman released a video titled “our side of it” on Facebook Wednesday morning.

The video is roughly nine minutes long. It was posted to the ‘Finding Sydney Loofe’ Facebook group, features what appears to be Bailey Boswell, 23, and Aubrey Trail, 51, sitting in a car talking about the disappearance of Sydney Loofe.

"We're not trying to defend anything we're not trying to make you believe anything we just feel we should get to say our side since everyone else gets to say theirs," Trail and Boswell say in the video.

Lincoln Police named Trail and Boswell as persons of interest in the case on Tuesday morning.

It is unknown where Trail and Boswell are located, but say in the video they have contacted Lincoln Police and the Saline County Sheriff's Office, but have not yet heard back.

"We were told to quit blowing up their phone even though we told them, 'hey do you understand we are the people you are looking for,'" Trail said in the video. "They said you've called here several times. We will get back to you when we can."

When John Walsh refers to criminals as cowards and creeps I just get more jacked

Thomas Hargrove is a homicide archivist. For the past seven years, he has been collecting municipal records of murders, and he now has the largest catalogue of killings in the country—751,785 murders carried out since 1976, which is roughly twenty-seven thousand more than appear in F.B.I. files. States are supposed to report murders to the Department of Justice, but some report inaccurately, or fail to report altogether, and Hargrove has sued some of these states to obtain their records. Using computer code he wrote, he searches his archive for statistical anomalies among the more ordinary murders resulting from lovers’ triangles, gang fights, robberies, or brawls. Each year, about five thousand people kill someone and don’t get caught, and a percentage of these men and women have undoubtedly killed more than once. Hargrove intends to find them with his code, which he sometimes calls a serial-killer detector.

FourLegsGood wrote:Trying to figure it out but the tenant went out of their way to contact the landlord so if they're trying to avoid attention for police showing up, they're doing a bad job. Also, it's a relatively up-rent place so I don't see that happening

Edit: my girlfriend was put in touch with the tenant and he told her basically the same details and also mentioned it was quite a spectacle on the street that other people on the block would corroborate.

any updates or additional info on this?

I am going to buy more books about elderly dogs in the future. Thank you.

We haven't heard anything. The tenant followed up with my gf randomly yesterday asking the same question and we have nothing to report. There is no police record of the call. 99% percent sure the tenant isn't lying (why would he get the landlord involved and jeopardize his residency on some prank). It's a true mystery.

FourLegsGood wrote:We haven't heard anything. The tenant followed up with my gf randomly yesterday asking the same question and we have nothing to report. There is no police record of the call. 99% percent sure the tenant isn't lying (why would he get the landlord involved and jeopardize his residency on some prank). It's a true mystery.

the tenant has a crush on your gf and made up a bullshit story for a pretext to talk to her